Abstract

The mid-Proterozoic stratigraphy of the McArthur Basin (Australia) contains some of the most well-preserved sedimentary rocks of Precambrian age, which are also host to giant, clastic dominant (CD-type) massive sulfide Zn deposits. The most recently discovered CD-type deposit (the Teena deposit) is located in the Teena subbasin and hosted by the 1.64 Ga Barney Creek Formation. The Teena subbasin, therefore, provides the perfect natural laboratory for evaluating authigenic and hydrothermal controls on trace element (TE) variability, both of which contribute to paleoenvironmental reconstructions and ore deposit models. As the Teena deposit formed beneath the paleoseafloor, this also provides the opportunity to evaluate TE zonation around a fossilized subseafloor replacement hydrothermal system. In situ laser ablation inductively coupled mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) has been used to define compositional end members in diagenetic and hydrothermal pyrite. The overgrowth of hydrothermal sulfides on diagenetic pyrite is associated with TE anomalism (Tl, Pb, As, Zn) that extends > 100 meters above the main high grade sulfide mineralization the Teena subbasin. The vertical zonation in TEs is consistent with the infiltration of hydrothermal fluids into overlying hangingwall sediments that were undergoing diagenesis. Bulk rock lithogeochemical data record covariation between total organic carbon (TOC) and a suite of TEs (Mo, Co, Ni, V). We suggest this was caused by local hydrographic factors during deposition of the Barney Creek Formation. High TOC/P molar ratios, resulting from regeneration of P in a euxinic water column, are associated with an interval overlying the main maximum flooding surface in the subbasin. The relationships between TOC, P and TEs resemble the redox architecture of a silled basin rather than an open marine margin. Sulfidic conditions developed during periods of high productivity, which were linked to nutrient supply that was enhanced by connectivity with surrounding water masses. The evidence of redox bistability, involving a delicate balance between ferruginous (anoxic, non-sulfidic) and euxinic (sulfidic) conditions, is consistent with recent models for other mid-Proterozoic sedimentary units. Nevertheless, there was a strong localised (101 km2) control on the authigenic and hydrothermal TE chemistry of the Barney Creek Formation in the Teena subbasin, which highlights a key challenge when extrapolating from data collected in partially restricted intracontinental marine settings.

Highlights

  • There are multiple generations of pyrite in the footwall mineralization lenses hosted by the W-Fold Shale Member, but the focus of this study is the higher-grade mineralization in the Lower HYC unit and the overlying hangingwall sequence

  • In the Teena subbasin, pyrite provides an archive of trace elements (TEs) that are associated with both biogenic and authigenic (e.g. Mo, Ni, Co) and hydrothermal (e.g. Tl, Pb, As) sources in the Teena subbasin

  • The formation of clastic dominant (CDtype) mineralization during burial diagenesis in the Teena subbasin has resulted in a complex paragenesis between diagenetic and hydrothermal pyrite

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Summary

Introduction

(detrital, biogenic, authigenic, hydrothermal) that operate on a variety of scales (Sageman and Lyons, 2003). Reconstructions of these processes from whole rock lithogeochemistry or in situ mineral chemistry datasets provide the foundations for models of both ancient paleoenvironments and hydrothermal ore deposits Large et al, 2014; Gregory et al, 2019; Wei and Algeo, 2020) One nexus between these two research areas can be found in the mid-Proterozoic McArthur Basin, which contains some of the most well-preserved Precambrian sedimentary rocks and a number of world class clastic dominant (CD-type) Zn deposits (Brocks et al, 2005; Large et al, 2005)

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